Corporeal%20Expressions

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Corporeal_Expressions: tracing both biomedical and emotional links from an artistic perspective Patricia Adams Dr. RMIT University, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, School of Art Patricia.Adams@rmit.edu.au INTRODUCTION This survey of my art/science research practice traces my experimental methodologies and considers my hybrid, interdisciplinary explorations into the nature of corporeality. It illustrates how my artistic reinterpretations of scientific experimental data led to the creation of artworks that implicate the viewer as a participant who can evaluate the socio-cultural issues raised by contemporary biotech research. Recontextualising scientific data in interactive artworks and placing installation viewers in a participatory role offers an alternative experience to that of direct laboratory engagement. Whilst escalating levels of scientific disciplinary constraints impacted upon my art/science research processes, my observations and data interpretations deliberately maintained an acknowledged artistic focus. My artworks: “machina carnis”, “Changing Fates_matrilineal” and “mellifera” are introduced here to illustrate how I reinterpreted what is commonly termed ‘hard’ scientific research from the perspective of a visual artist. I introduced a sensual reading of the scientific experience which resonated with the reintroduction of the Baroque aesthetic, so long rejected in favour of literate understanding and reason: “(i)t is precisely the baroque’s subversion of the dominant visual order of scientific reason that makes it so attractive in our postmodern age…in its disparagement of lucid clarity and essential form, baroque vision celebrated instead the confusing interplay of form and chaos, surface and depth, transparency and obscurity.” [1] My personal interpretations and responses have been paramount when developing hybrid spaces and open ended methodologies and during my innovative art/science research four fundamental questions arose: What will occur if a visual artist engages with biomedical engineering as a first-person researcher? Can two customarily divergent disciplines create hybrid spaces where artists can interrogate science? How might an artist represent ‘corporeality’ at the beginning of the twenty first century? What constitutes ‘humanness’ when both contemporary biotechnology and digital systems are rapidly changing the ways we see ourselves and actively remodeling the human body? MACHINA CARNIS The “machina carnis” project involved working in collaboration with a biomedical scientist, Dr. Victor Nurcombe. I was arguably the first artist to experiment on her own adult stem cells and change them into beating cardiac cells in the laboratory. [2] In these experiments I contravened accepted scientific protocols by assuming the role of a ‘human guinea pig’ and carrying out my research in the first person on my own cells. The University ethics committee considered this a problematic methodology. They were concerned that, from a hygiene perspective, there could be a danger of transmitting life-threatening diseases when unscreened human material is put into equipment and cultured in the laboratory. Also, following the repercussions of the landmark He La case, [3] they had to take into account complex moral and ethical issues in the areas of social values and ownership. A first-person methodology was crucial to my research focus in spite of these problems. My commitment to a first person approach was based on


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